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Greece: "Lockdown fatigue" blamed for fueling mass protests

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Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

FILE - In this Wednesday, Feb. 10, 2021 file photo, protesters throw a petrol bomb at riot police during a student rally against campus policing, in Athens. Faced with a surge in coronavirus infections and a wave of violent anti-government demonstrations, Greeces center-right prime minister accused political opponents Friday March 12, 2021, of exploiting lockdown fatigue. (AP Photo/Petros Giannakouris, File)

ATHENS – Faced with a surge in coronavirus infections and a wave of violent anti-government demonstrations, Greece’s center-right prime minister accused political opponents Friday of exploiting lockdown fatigue.

Dozens of demonstrations have taken place in Athens and other Greek cities over the past month following multiple allegations of police brutality in enforcing a nightly curfew and other strict lockdown measures. The protests were also fueled by a recent decision to launch police patrols on university campuses as well as a hunger strike by a jailed militant group gunman to demand a prison transfer.

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Often attended by thousands in defiance of lockdown restrictions, the protests have triggered nightly clashes between demonstrators and police.

Speaking in parliament, Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis claimed opposition parties had acted irresponsibly and ignored his appeals for calm.

“There is a serious risk that the pandemic will be turned from a threat to public health into a threat to our society, by those who exploit the flammable material that is the fatigue from (lockdown) measures,” Mistotakis said. “We all agreed on these measures, but some choose to light a fire that will torch the unity and security of our citizens.” A police officer was suspended this week after a video shared on social media showed him beating a man stopped for an inspection with an extendable steel baton. Riots that broke out in response to the incident left one police officer seriously injured.

Officials in the center-right government have expressed concern that the frequent rallies could be boosting the spread of COVID-19.

The infection rate in Greece recently exceeded those of Britain and the United States, and on Thursday stood at 20.2 per 100,000 residents as a seven-day rolling average.

Alexis Tsipras, a former prime minister and current left-wing opposition leader, argued that the government’s use of heavy-handed policing had backfired.

“You are presenting the public with a false reality,” Tsipras told parliament Friday. “And even worse, you are taking advantage of the pandemic as a pretext to impose harsh measures, restrict democratic rights and freedoms, and advance an agenda that is damaging the public interest.”

In an apparent appeal to both sides for calm, Greece's health minister earlier this week urged Greeks to stick to lockdown restrictions regardless of grievances and give the national vaccination drive more time to build immunity in the population. “I am speaking as the health minister and not through party affiliation,” Vassilis Kikilias said during a health briefing. “We need to lower the temperature.”

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Follow AP’s pandemic coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/coronavirus-pandemic, https://apnews.com/hub/coronavirus-vaccine and https://apnews.com/UnderstandingtheOutbreak.


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